Mastodon

Feedbin

As I’ve mentioned before, NetNewsWire has been my favorite RSS reader. They’ve had a small hiccup with their recent update, but it was not a huge deal. Regarding accessibility, it no longer recognizes my three-finger swipe to move to the next article. I found a workaround by tapping and holding with one finger, then swiping. This fixes the problem for me, though it’s not as fluid as the three-finger swipe I was used to.

My bigger issue with NetNewsWire was iCloud syncing. On my phone, it worked perfectly since I use it daily. However, on my iPad, where I only check occasionally, it never synchronized smoothly. It took forever, and for a while, it wouldn’t sync at all. At one point, it showed the last sync was three months ago. I deleted the iCloud-related feeds, deactivated the account, and rebuilt everything from scratch. It claimed to sync afterward, but no new articles appeared in the feeds.

Frustrated, I searched for alternative RSS readers but found none that fit my accessibility needs with text-to-speech. At least, none I preferred over NetNewsWire.

Then I saw someone mention Feedbin, a complete RSS service with its own app. I’m trying it out with their 30-day free trial. So far, the synchronization is spot-on. I still prefer NetNewsWire’s interface over the Feedbin app, but I haven’t had any sync issues across my devices. It’s incredibly fast too.

Feedbin has become my new source of truth, via NetNewsWire. I imported my feeds using an OPML file exported from NetNewsWire. Once I brought everything into the system, it just worked. Now, it does cost $5 per month or $50 per year, but if it works for me, I’m happy to pay. I’m a firm believer in paying for tools that help you get things done while supporting the developers who create them. Free options always worry me because I never know how long they’ll last.

Beyond speed and ease of use, Feedbin offers a perk that iCloud and NetNewsWire alone don’t: a unique email address for newsletter subscriptions. This brings newsletters directly into my RSS feed, so I can read them alongside my other news sources throughout the day. Pretty neat.

Since I already had a newsletter email set up, I created a rule that automatically forwards anything sent to that address to my unique Feedbin email, then deletes it from my email client. Everything happens in the background—I never see newsletters in my inbox, but they appear in my RSS feed. It’s great all around.

I’m still on the 30-day trial, but I’ve already entered my payment information. Unless I find a showstopper, I’ll be subscribing to Feedbin as soon as the trial expires.